Do Safety Failures Preclude Knowledge?

Autores

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5007/1808-1711.2018v22n2p301

Resumo

The safety condition on knowledge, in the spirit of anti-luck epistemology, has become one of the most popular approaches to the Gettier problem. In the first part of this essay, I intend to show one of the reasons the anti-luck epistemologist presents for thinking that the safety theory, and not the sensitivity theory, offers the proper anti-luck condition on knowledge. In the second part of this essay, I intend to show that the anti-luck epistemologist does not succeed, because the safety theory fails to capture a necessary requirement for the possession of knowledge. I will attack safety on two fronts. First, I will raise doubts about whether there is any principled safety condition capable of handling a kind of case, involving inductive knowledge, that it was designed to handle. Second, I will consider two cases in which the safety condition is not met but the protagonist seems to have knowledge nonetheless, and I will vindicate my intuitions for thinking that those are in fact cases of knowledge by contrasting them with traditional, well-known Gettier cases. I want to conclude, finally, that safety failures do not necessarily prevent one from acquiring knowledge.

Biografia do Autor

J. R. Fett, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul (PUCRS)

Bacharel e Mestre em Filosofia pela PUCRS. Atualmente, doutorando em filosofia pela PUCRS. Área de especialização: Epistemologia Analítica. Publicação mais relevante: "Defeasibility and gettierization: a reminder", com Claudio de Almeida, no Australasian Journal of Philosophy.

Publicado

2018-12-31

Edição

Seção

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